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Simulation of Human Motion Data using Short‐Horizon Model‐Predictive Control
Author(s) -
Da Silva M.,
Abe Y.,
Popović J.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
computer graphics forum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.578
H-Index - 120
eISSN - 1467-8659
pISSN - 0167-7055
DOI - 10.1111/j.1467-8659.2008.01134.x
Subject(s) - precomputation , computer science , controller (irrigation) , motion capture , motion (physics) , component (thermodynamics) , computer animation , model predictive control , animation , control theory (sociology) , character animation , artificial intelligence , computer vision , simulation , algorithm , control (management) , computer graphics (images) , computation , physics , agronomy , biology , thermodynamics
Many data‐driven animation techniques are capable of producing high quality motions of human characters. Few techniques, however, are capable of generating motions that are consistent with physically simulated environments. Physically simulated characters, in contrast, are automatically consistent with the environment, but their motions are often unnatural because they are difficult to control. We present a model‐predictive controller that yields natural motions by guiding simulated humans toward real motion data. During simulation, the predictive component of the controller solves a quadratic program to compute the forces for a short window of time into the future. These forces are then applied by a low‐gain proportional‐derivative component, which makes minor adjustments until the next planning cycle. The controller is fast enough for interactive systems such as games and training simulations. It requires no precomputation and little manual tuning. The controller is resilient to mismatches between the character dynamics and the input motion, which allows it to track motion capture data even where the real dynamics are not known precisely. The same principled formulation can generate natural walks, runs, and jumps in a number of different physically simulated surroundings.

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